The Dutch had landed their troops on…
November 1759 CE
The three remaining British ships have followed the Dutch ships up the river at some distance.
When the Dutch have finished landing the troops, the Dutch ships begin moving down the river.
On November 23, Commodore Charles Wilson, commander of the British flotilla, indicates that he wants to pass the Dutch, who threatens to fire on the British if they do.
The next day, after the rejection of an ultimatum from Clive demanding restitution for the earlier Dutch seizures, the two fleets engage in a two-hour battle.
The Duke of Dorset forces the Dutch flagship Vlissingen to strike her colors, while Hardwicke and Calcutta chase off two ships and ground a third before the remaining ships also strike their colors.(Other British ships arriving at the mouth of the river eventually capture the two remaining fleeing Dutch ships.)
Locations
Groups
France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
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Dutch East India Company in Indonesia
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Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie or VOC in Dutch, literally "United East Indies Company")
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Carnatic, Nawabs of the
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Britain, Kingdom of Great
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East India Company, British (United Company of Merchants of England Trading to the East Indies)
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French Company of the Indies
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Bengal, Nawabs of
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